Nitromater

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New Top Fuel Team?

That's been Lance's email address for years, could be a temporary server issue or software compatibility issue of some strange kind where he gets the email, but it show's kicked back. My email does that sometimes in addition to text messaging to other providers sometimes.
 
It's not Lance's team. He will be co-crew chief on a new team for an owner new to drag racing with familiar names for both his co-crew chief and driver.
 
ya...those 16 or so virtually identical sponsor platforms in the "big show" do come off pretty lame compared with the variety and creativity and passion you see at the CHRR ;)
 
You guys who weren't there have no clue what you missed. 22 cars running 320 mph, who cares? Every one is the same and the tractors are on the track more than the race cars.
 
In the 60's the "Smokers" (car club) March meet consistently had over 100 T/F dragsters. They also did something that will never happen again. They ran a 64 car show on saturday and a 64 car show on sunday. The winners from each day would then race for the title.
There were several shows like that in So.Cal in the 60's. Doug Kruse, yes the body builder, put on 64 car shows at Lions and there were cars that didn't qualify. The racers would always gripe about the quick turnaround time you had between rounds on saturday night at Lions but would show up at San Fernando on sunday where you couldn't run until noon and had to close down at 4:30 which included qualifying and the race and nobody ever complained. You have never seen anything like a full day of T/F cars running without a break in the action trying to qualify for 64 spots. If they blew a engine or oiled the track they used cat litter to sweep up the mess or if it was real bad on the starting line use a little rosen than ran the next pair. The only sweepers they had were the guys out their with brooms sweeping it up. Their also was not "one" grove down the track. One car might go down the the middle, the next on the left side of the lane, another on the right side. Just ran where they thought the track was best for them and some ran right on the edge. They didn't put traction compound on the track. You had a bottle of traction compound that you poured under your tires before your burnout, that's all.
It's was totally amazing to have one pair of cars staging to run and the next pair starting up on the rollers at the Beach. If you look at pics at Lions and it shows the tower side grand stands you can see that the stands ran right up to the edge of the track. You could almost touch the cars. I remember one time when Mickey Thompson who was running the track and got mad at someone in the stands and climbed over the fence into the stands. You didn't want to get Mickey mad at you. Most of the people in the tower side stands were racers, what a party that was.
Talk to some of the old racers like Garlits, Connie, Jerry Ruth, Mike Kuhl, McEwen, Purdhome and many others and they will all tell you racing today is nothing like the late 50's to mid 70's and tell you it was by far the best of times.
 
Fuel cars running 6.70-7.00's? I seriously doubt it! They couldn't qualify for Pro Stock!
Hi Joe
To sit in the stands and hear the front motored cars and nostalgic funny cars is so much more exciting that watching 16 pro stocks motor on down the track. They may run the same times but I would rather see, hear and smell nitro run over a FULL quarter mile track than today's cookie cutter fuel cars and unrecognizable (except for the decals) funny cars putter on 90% for a 1000 feet. Cars with names on the sides not 25 sponsor decals with no soul. Teams that sweat and work all year to get their car out to the track under a pop up shelter with a budget that could not feed a current team for the weekend. That was what made racing great and the sport has strayed from it and the car counts at big shows versus nostalgia shows reflect that.

We went to the Meltdown Drags at Byron Raceway in Illinois this summer and they had 500 pre 1966 cars there. Front engined dragsters, nose high gasssers, modifieds, A/FX cars and the list goes on. The kicker was nobody got paid to show up and there was no prize money! Every team paid to have their car in the show and was just glad to be a part of it. They had to close registration due to the pits being full or there would have been more cars there. That is the drawing power of the Golden Age of drag racing not decals, spec cars and TV time.
Now back to your regularly scheduled post.
 
Why argue about the old days? NOTHING stays the same folks. Part of the excitement of drag racing through the decades was always the constant possibility of records and barriers being broken. That can't go on forever. We just can't have 400mph 1/4 mile runs, safely. It's evolution. And "puttering" on 90% is not what big show cars do, IMO. Myself, I'm trying to enjoy it all. There's so much variety out there to enjoy, the NHRA, IHRA, the fuel altered circuits, the different Pro Mod Series', and of course the huge Nostalgia craze. Oh and speaking of Pro Mod, the number of these cars out there is amazing, and they are wild. Combine all this with the crazy cars coming out of Detroit, and I'd say these just may be "the good old days". Enjoy them.
 

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